fred, on Dec 5 2008, 10:50 AM, said:
Quote
(from awm)
I don't know what the "motives" of the committee are and I don't care to guess.
There is no need to guess. I know and I have told you. Jan knows and she has told you. Frances knows and she has told you. Anyone who has a personal relationship with any past or current members of the committee will know and I am sure they will tell you too if you ask them.
If you really think that all of us are lying and that there is some kind of massive conspriracy going on, that is your right of course. But you seem to be too bright to be swayed by such a stupid notion. The obvious explanation is that the committee consists of people with good intentions whose judgment differs from yours (plus what sounds like some poor administration and I don't think it is reasonable to assign all of the blame for this to the bridge experts who served on the committee).
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
It is interesting that I specifically stated that I do not want to guess at motives, and here you are accusing me of impugning their motives.
All I am trying to say is that:
(1) The committee has made decisions which are potentially controversial, which a lot of people disagree with. Given the poll results, it may even be that a
majority disagree with the transfer opening decision for national-level events.
(2) The committee has made these decisions with absolutely no
explanation for their reasoning. They have done this even though the regulations creating the committee
require minutes to be posted. There have also been indications (mis-CC'd emails, etc) that the nature of discussions going on in the committee is very different from what they communicate in their rare email responses.
(3) This creates a situation where a number of people are unhappy. Methods they would like to play have been disallowed. The reasoning by which this is done has never been explained. The necessary steps to change the situation have never been explained. The committee appears to ignore many emails, or take a very long time in replying, and when they do reply it is usually with very terse "we will not allow it" or "your defense is insufficient" types of responses.
(4) The people serving on the committee obviously have friends (and spouses) who are willing to defend their motives. Fine, most people do. Nonetheless it seems odd that most of the folks on this committee seem to be part of the same "clique" and that some folks have served on the committee for a very long time despite a number of complaints about the committee's performance and repeated claims that this committee is "a lot of work." It's easy to imagine that this small "clique" might have very similar views on some matters which might not reflect the views of bridge players at large. And in fact the two people on these forums who seem to know the committee members best and defend their motives the most (Fred and Jan) also seem to hold some of the most negative views about proliferation of methods in bridge.
(5) It is distressing that while the English Bridge Union was creating their amazingly clear set of regulations (with many useful examples) and also leaning towards allowing more and more methods, the ACBL is moving in exactly the opposite direction. While there might be some justification for banning multi in national pairs events (and the Reisinger!), those of us who might want to play multi in those events have, for the most part, not been privy to the justification. In fact it makes ACBL look rather ridiculous that one of their premier events (Reisinger is perhaps the most prestigious BAM event in the world) disallows a convention that is played in clubs around the world. Not only have the regulations been becoming more restrictive, but the manner in which the regulations are presented (which has always been
far from clear) seems to be getting worse. There have been any number of debates on this forum about whether a particular method is allowed in ACBL events, and even repeated queries to the league meet with contradictory replies (admittedly it is not the C&C that replies to these, but they are responsible for creating the regulations that even Mr. Flader and Mr. Beye seem unable to fully understand).
I'm sorry if this seems to impugn the motives of your friends. But I am just stating facts here. There are many possible explanations, but the facts of the matter are that your friends have decided to be very restrictive in what methods they allow (relative to what people on the forums want, relative to the rest of the world, etc). Whether they do this because they firmly believe it's "best for bridge" or for some other reason is unknown, but the fact that they refuse to publicly state their reasons (even in the
required minutes that never appear) tends to create suspicion that their motives may not all be above-board.
This is unfortunate, especially if the committee doesn't have nefarious motives (as their friends and family are quick to insist). However, I suggest that the best way to solve the problem is not to challenge people to "grudge matches" at the bridge table, but to encourage the committee members to make their proceedings more transparent, so all interested parties can see their reasoning and the type of issues they struggle with. Perhaps take Rob Forster up on his offer. If the committee is doing the best they can and everything is fair and above board, then they have nothing at all to hide.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit